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Craig Harris of The Arizona Republic is the first recipient
Craig Harris, a reporter with The Arizona Republic, is the first recipient of the Toner Prize for Excellence in Political Reporting, given by 黑料不打烊鈥檚 .
Harris, 43, won for an eight-part series on Arizona鈥檚 broken and expensive public pension plan, which costs taxpayers nearly $1.4 billion each year. His coverage was among the first in-depth looks at troubled pensions that have now become major news in states across the country. In Arizona, his series instigated reform from state lawmakers and mayors to change the pension systems and correct the abuses.
The Toner Prize is part of the Newhouse School鈥檚 , which honors the late Robin Toner 鈥76, a SU alumna who was the first woman to be national political correspondent of The New York Times.
Honorable mentions for the Toner Prize also went to Ryan Lizza of The New Yorker and Sebastian Jones and Marcus Stern of ProPublica. Lizza鈥檚 narrative, 鈥淎s the World Burns,鈥 demonstrated the failure of climate change legislation this summer meant to transform the nation鈥檚 use of energy. Jones and Stern reported on the ways money influences public policy and the electoral process, such as political fundraisers at a Super Bowl and a Bruce Springsteen concert.
鈥淲e鈥檙e delighted to honor such outstanding examples of political reporting,鈥 says Lorraine Branham, dean of the Newhouse School. 鈥淭his extraordinary journalism enriches democracy by giving voters crucial information to shape their communities and hold public officials accountable. It exemplifies the insight, incisiveness and passion for public policy that were hallmarks of Robin Toner鈥檚 work.鈥
The journalists will be honored March 28 at a celebration at the Newhouse School. The event will also feature the Toner Lecture on American Politics and Political Journalism by award-winning journalist Marilyn Serafini. She is the first Robin Toner Distinguished Fellow for the Kaiser Family Foundation and reports on health policy and politics for Kaiser Health News.
The Toner Prize competition drew 103 entries from across the country and from across media platforms. They included a rich mixture of American journalism: the largest news organizations such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, PBS and NPR; online, non-profit publications such as Voice of San Diego and ProPublica; and community newspapers such as the Times West Virginian (circulation 10,400) and the Morris (Ill.) Daily Herald (circulation 7,950).
To judge the competition, 30 veteran journalists鈥攎ost of them now teaching journalism at universities鈥攕erved on 10 juries to recommend finalists.听
The Toner Prize and honorable mention recognition was awarded by the five finalist judges: Adam Clymer, formerly chief Washington correspondent for The New York Times and a member of the Toner Program Fundraising Committee; Dorothy Gilliam, formerly of The Washington Post and now director of the Young Journalists Development Program at The George Washington University; Paul Delaney, formerly head of the journalism department of the University of Alabama, a founder of the National Association of Black Journalists and formerly a reporter and editor for The New York Times; 听Marcy McGinnis, formerly executive vice president of news coverage for CBS News, where she spent 35 years, and now associate dean of Stony Brook University’s School of Journalism; and David Yepsen, who spent 35 years with The Des Moines Register, often in friendly competition with Toner covering the Iowa caucuses, and who is now the director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University Carbondale.听
In praising Harris鈥 Toner Prize-winning work, judges cited the depth and thoroughness of his series on the public pension system. 鈥淗e did it the old-fashioned way鈥攍ots of sweat equity, patience and perseverance,鈥 says Delaney.
In The New Yorker, writer Lizza 鈥渢ook a boring topic鈥攃ap and trade legislation鈥攁nd made it compelling through good storytelling and reporting,鈥 says Yepsen. 鈥淲e need to see more of this kind of reporting and writing on lots of subjects because it so completely engages a reader.鈥
Of the follow-the-money reporting on ProPublica by Jones and Stern, one of the judges described it as a 鈥渂rilliant entry.鈥 Added Clymer: 鈥淭his entry clearly connects politics and policy, one of Robin Toner鈥檚 greatest strengths.鈥
Toner, who graduated from SU in 1976 with a dual degree in journalism from the Newhouse School and political science from The College of Arts and Sciences, spent 25 years as a reporter for The New York Times. She began her journalism career in West Virginia for the Charleston Daily Mail and reported for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. For The New York Times, she covered five presidential campaigns, scores of Congressional and gubernatorial races and most of the nation鈥檚 major public policy issues. She died in 2008. She was married to fellow journalist Peter Gosselin and the mother of twins, Nora and Jacob.听
Her husband, friends, classmates and 黑料不打烊 are fundraising for a $1 million campaign to endow The Robin Toner Program in Political Reporting.听 For more information on the program, visit .
Below are links to the winning entries for the first Toner Prize:
Craig Harris, 鈥淎n Arizona Republic Investigation: Public Pensions, A Soaring Burden鈥:听
Ryan Lizza, 鈥淎s the World Burns鈥:
Sebastian Jones and Marcus Stern, 鈥淧roPublica鈥檚 Money & Politics Series鈥:
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